Bitcoin.com has announced a partnership with tokenization platform Dinari to introduce tokenized U.S. equities to its global user base. According to the announcement, users of the Bitcoin.com Wallet app — part of an ecosystem that has generated more than 84 million self-custodial wallets — will be able to buy, sell, and hold Dinari’s dShares™, gaining access to more than 300 tokenized U.S. stocks and ETFs.
The move reflects a broader push to connect blockchain-native distribution with traditional financial exposure. Rather than positioning tokenized equities as a niche crypto product, the partnership presents them as a more accessible route into the U.S. capital markets for international users who have historically faced geographic restrictions, brokerage friction, and legacy settlement systems.
Expanding access to U.S. equities through tokenization
At the center of the partnership is Dinari’s dShares™ model, which is designed to combine blockchain-based accessibility with protections associated with traditional securities investing. Bitcoin.com said the collaboration is intended to make access to U.S. equities as straightforward as using a crypto wallet, helping open investment opportunities to users beyond the United States. The initial rollout is expected to focus on non-U.S. users.
Bitcoin.com CEO Corbin Fraser said in the announcement that access to U.S. stocks has long been constrained by geography and outdated infrastructure. Through the integration with Dinari, the company aims to extend that access to its worldwide audience in a simpler, more direct format. The messaging underscores a familiar thesis in digital asset markets: blockchain rails can reduce frictions that have traditionally limited participation in cross-border investing.
For Dinari, the partnership serves as a distribution milestone. The company describes its framework as compliance-first, signaling that tokenized stock exposure must be paired with regulated processes and investor protections if it is to scale beyond crypto-native circles. In that sense, the collaboration is not only about product expansion, but also about testing whether tokenized securities can move closer to mainstream financial adoption.
More than 300 stocks and ETFs, plus integrated trading tools
Under the agreement, Bitcoin.com users are expected to gain access to more than 300 tokenized U.S. stocks and exchange-traded funds. The offering will be embedded directly into the Bitcoin.com platform through Dinari’s trading infrastructure, giving users a way to discover, transact, and manage these assets from within a familiar wallet environment.
Bitcoin.com is also set to become the first platform to deploy Dinari’s embedded trading application built on Base. The turnkey application is intended to provide a fully integrated front-end experience for browsing dShares™, executing trades, and managing holdings. According to the announcement, users will be able to view real-time market data, place transactions, and monitor portfolio performance without leaving the Bitcoin.com platform.
This type of integration matters because distribution and usability have often been bottlenecks for tokenized real-world assets. Even where tokenized products exist, user adoption can remain limited if access requires fragmented onboarding, separate interfaces, or specialist infrastructure. By placing tokenized equities inside a large self-custody wallet ecosystem, the two companies appear to be targeting convenience as a major growth lever.
Economic rights and blockchain-native functionality
Dinari says its tokenized stock product is designed to preserve key economic rights associated with the underlying equities. The announcement states that holders retain rights including cash dividends, NBBO best-execution trading, and protected economic claims tied to the underlying assets. At the same time, the blockchain-based structure is promoted for features such as instant settlement, easier transfers, and 24/7 support for major names.
The emphasis on both rights and flexibility is central to how tokenized securities are being marketed across the industry. Traditional equity markets are deep and liquid, but they also rely on market infrastructure built around brokers, custodians, and fixed trading hours. Tokenization advocates argue that digital wrappers around financial instruments can improve accessibility and operational efficiency, while skeptics continue to focus on the importance of legal enforceability, custody design, and regulatory clarity. Dinari’s language in the release clearly seeks to position dShares™ on the side of enforceable and compliant access, not simply speculative convenience.
Dinari CEO and co-founder Gabe Otte framed the opportunity in global market terms. He noted that the U.S. stock market represents nearly half of the world’s $127 trillion equity market capitalization, making it the deepest and most liquid equity market globally. Yet for many investors outside the United States, direct access has remained difficult due to geographical barriers, intermediaries, and legacy market structure. The partnership with Bitcoin.com, he said, is intended to help change that by broadening compliant access to a worldwide user base.
Early access to a hybrid equity-crypto index
Beyond single-name stocks and ETFs, the partnership includes another notable component: Bitcoin.com users are expected to receive early access to the S&P Digital Markets 50 Index, developed by Dinari in collaboration with S&P Dow Jones Indices. The product is described in the announcement as the first benchmark to combine U.S. stocks and cryptocurrencies into a single, directly investable on-chain instrument.
According to the release, the index token offers exposure to 35 U.S.-listed equities linked to digital markets and 15 major cryptocurrencies. That structure is designed to give investors a unified multi-asset product spanning both public equities and digital assets, while also highlighting tokenization’s transparency and the control associated with direct indexing. If the rollout proceeds as described, the index could serve as a showcase for how traditional benchmarks are being reinterpreted in tokenized form for blockchain-based distribution.
The inclusion of an equity-crypto index is significant because it broadens the narrative beyond simple tokenized stock access. It suggests a model in which public market exposure and digital asset exposure can be packaged together for on-chain investing. Whether that model gains traction will likely depend on demand, jurisdictional treatment, and how effectively platforms can educate users about the different risks associated with each asset class.
A signal for the tokenized securities market
At a higher level, the partnership points to the continued maturation of tokenized real-world assets as a category. Over the past several years, tokenization has expanded from concept-stage pilots to live products covering government bonds, private credit, funds, and now increasingly listed equities. The Bitcoin.com-Dinari announcement presents tokenized stocks as part of the next stage of financial infrastructure modernization, one aimed at more efficient settlement, better capital efficiency, and broader global reach.
That framing is consistent with a wider industry trend: tokenization is increasingly being promoted not just as a technological upgrade, but as a distribution mechanism capable of connecting globally dispersed investors to assets that were previously difficult to access. For companies with large crypto user bases, tokenized securities also represent a bridge product — one that may appeal to users interested in both digital assets and conventional financial exposure.
Still, the announcement remains fundamentally a product and partnership launch. It does not claim that tokenized securities have solved every legal or market-structure issue associated with cross-border investing. Instead, it highlights a specific route forward: pairing a global wallet platform with a compliance-oriented tokenization provider to deliver U.S. equity exposure in a blockchain-enabled format.
For Bitcoin.com, the deal expands the scope of what its wallet ecosystem can offer beyond core crypto functions. For Dinari, it creates a prominent distribution channel tied to millions of users. And for the broader market, it adds another example of how tokenization is moving from theoretical promise toward direct consumer-facing implementation.

